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Volume I : Chapters 1-5 present the problem and the principles (Ethnomethodology and Constructivism) of the approach . The following chapters (6-9) propose a mathematical model of Ethnogenesis, based on constructivism and the theory of catastrophes, showing "ethnogenesis" as a "viral infection of information". Chapter l0 identifies such an "indo-European virus". Volumes II-IV: The existing theories about the "Origin of the Germanic Tribes", revisited through a critical lecture of sources, translations and interpretations. chapter 1l : The ambiguous definition of the concept "Germanic Tribes". 12: Comparability of ancient and modern Geography. 13: Genealogy of the god Tuisto. 14: Cimbers and Teutons. 15: Bastarnes and Tencteri. 16: Origin of the Goths. 17: the south-Russian Goths. 18: The Huns. 19: Goths, Rerules and Huns compared. 20: The dynasty of the Amali. 21: The Caucasian background. 22: The Burgundians. 23: The Merovingians. 24: The Langobardians. 25: Germania Slavica. Chapter 26 draws the conclusion: "Germania" was originally a political creation of Cesar and included , besides some Celtic tribes, a majority of Baltic, Slavonic and "proto-Slavonic" peoples. The great new tribes of the so-called "Migration of Nations" were new creations, due to "ethnogenetic kernels" of Eurasian nomads, originally iranophones (Alans, Roxolans, Jazyges). This explains also the similarities between the irano-Parthian and the later western feudalism . Chapter 27: "Coda" sketches the historical, philosophical and political origin of the later developed, and now traditional image of the "Migration of the Germanic or Teutonic Nations" ("Volkerwanderung").

Volume I : Chapters 1-5 present the problem and the principles (Ethnomethodology and Constructivism) of the approach . The following chapters (6-9) propose a mathematical model of Ethnogenesis, based on constructivism and the theory of catastrophes, showing "ethnogenesis" as a "viral infection of information". Chapter l0 identifies such an "indo-European virus". Volumes II-IV: The existing theories about the "Origin of the Germanic Tribes", revisited through a critical lecture of sources, translations and interpretations. chapter 1l : The ambiguous definition of the concept "Germanic Tribes". 12: Comparability of ancient and modern Geography. 13: Genealogy of the god Tuisto. 14: Cimbers and Teutons. 15: Bastarnes and Tencteri. 16: Origin of the Goths. 17: the south-Russian Goths. 18: The Huns. 19: Goths, Rerules and Huns compared. 20: The dynasty of the Amali. 21: The Caucasian background. 22: The Burgundians. 23: The Merovingians. 24: The Langobardians. 25: Germania Slavica. Chapter 26 draws the conclusion: "Germania" was originally a political creation of Cesar and included , besides some Celtic tribes, a majority of Baltic, Slavonic and "proto-Slavonic" peoples. The great new tribes of the so-called "Migration of Nations" were new creations, due to "ethnogenetic kernels" of Eurasian nomads, originally iranophones (Alans, Roxolans, Jazyges). This explains also the similarities between the irano-Parthian and the later western feudalism . Chapter 27: "Coda" sketches the historical, philosophical and political origin of the later developed, and now traditional image of the "Migration of the Germanic or Teutonic Nations" ("Volkerwanderung").